Map/Chart > The Bahamas

Great Harbour, Berry Islands, Bahama

This survey was completed as part of a larger survey of the Outer Islands which form the Abacos between 1816 & 1817.

Chart Information

Reference:

A524

Date

1816

Hydrographer/Surveyor/Artist:

Anthony De Mayne

Size Of Original:

w 11" x h 15.5"

Paper Type

Hahnemuhle German Etching 310gsm

Further Information

This print is
also available framed (USA & Canada delivery only).

Chart ID

Size

Dimensions

Print Only

Framed

Notes

A524

Original

w11" x h15.5

$60

$170

1.5" frame

Frames
available in either black or brown wood with UV protective acrylic glazing. Please go to the drop down menu (Standard Print Sizes) to
select your choice.

Read the full Chart History here:

With
this beautiful survey of Great Harbour at the north end of what is Great Harbour Cay in the Berry island group, Admiralty surveyor Anthony De Mayne places the harbour and its anchorage in the center of his manuscript and he does not
spare the necessary hydrographical detail which includes standardized
Admiralty symbols for tide directions, rock, shoals, sandbanks and
anchorages. As part of this larger survey of the Abacos, De Mayne concentrated on
the small but potentially significant Islands harbours in the outer
island region.

All of these historic surveys produced by De Mayne were later copied and published in a less stylish fashion that lacks the colour and ‘feel’ that De Mayne brought to this original work. As with the other original manuscripts in the collection he
uses a subtle brown watercolour outline to emphasis the coastlines.

At the bottom of the survey De Mayne has drawn and painted two views of the land as seen from sea. This, again, was fairly standard practice amongst the more talented Admiralty surveyors as it was a major assistance to sailors approaching such harbours for the first time. At the very top of the survey he has written a short description of the harbour and Islands and includes the note that ‘the Islands are but thinly inhabited’.

Latitude of the harbour is given by De Mayne as being; 25º, 48', 30" and Longitude as; 77º, 53', 0'. Out of interest, and with the benefit of modern
satellite technology, the harbour is in fact at 25º, 81' and 77º, 89' (see note A
below).De Mayne also provides the survey although a scale in fathoms, equating to half a nautical mile is included.

Note A.Tempting as it may be to test De Mayne’s skill as a surveyor by sailing
and navigating by his survey, Heritage Charts accepts no responsibility for
such actions and advises against such activity.

A Brief History of Abaco and the Out Islands

Not until after the American Revolutionary War had finally ended in 1782 did the Bahamas and the outer islands of the Abaco take-on a noticeable, if not significant, role in history. With the expulsion of Loyalist sympathizers from their colonial holdings in 1782 the British government, which in itself had only until November 1783 to vacate the city of New York, its last holding in America, struggled to find refuge for it’s vanquished and now penniless supporters. England apart, Canada was one option, the Abaco islands was the other.

The first ship full of emigres had left New York in August 1783 for a land which British surveyor John Wilson described as being ‘..one fifth part of the face of the country is nothing but rock’. He went on to describe the suitability of whatever soil there was as being suitable only for; cotton, vegetables & guinea corn. As an estimation of sustainability Wilson’s survey proved to be ‘optimistic’ in as much as it would take a level of expertise and land management to fulfill the promises and hopes of the British government and the emigres, which frankly didn’t exist.

By the 1790 civil unrest was boiling over, especially amongst the races. Initially, it seems, indenture had been implemented forcing even free blacks to ‘belong’ to whites. Many of the former slaves who had ‘emigrated’ complained that they thought, under British law that they would be free. With shortages of all kinds social order was further under threat. Agriculture had failed due to inefficient land management, cotton never developed as hoped on Abaco although it had on the southern islands of Eleuthera. When the provisions supplied by the British government had run out, starvation had taken hold for many.

Many of the original Loyalist immigrants had moved away to Nassau or beyond. Only fledgling settlements and communities survived.

A second immigration of people, this time from the more southerly Eleuthera islands, brought expertise in boat building, fishing and wrecking and these three industries in particular proved the way forward for many with towns such as New Plymouth on Green Turtle Cay and Hope Town on Elbow Cay springing-up and developing as a direct result of these industries.

References:

'Abaco: The History of an Out Island and its Cays'. Steve Dodge, Professor of History, Millikin
University, Third Edition (2005). White Sound Press.